If you want to
have a life of ecstasy you will have to accept many agonies. If you want the
peaks of the Himalayas then you will also have the valleys. But nothing is
wrong with the valleys; your approach just has to be different. You can enjoy
both - the peak is beautiful, so is the valley. And there are moments when one
should enjoy the peak and there are moments when one should relax in the
valley.
The peak is
sunlit, it is in a dialogue with the sky. The valley is dark, but whenever you
want to relax you have to move into the darkness of the valley. If you want to
have peaks you will need to grow roots into the valley - the deeper your roots
go, the higher your tree will grow. The tree cannot grow without roots and the
roots have to move deep into the soil.
Pain and
pleasure are intrinsic parts of life. People are so much afraid of pain that
they repress pain, they avoid any situation that brings pain, they go on
dodging pain. And finally they stumble upon the fact that if you really want to
avoid pain you will have to avoid pleasure. That's why your monks avoid
pleasure: they are afraid of pleasure. In fact, they are simply avoiding all
possibilities of pain. They know that if you avoid pleasure then naturally
great pain is not possible; it comes only as a shadow of pleasure. Then you
walk on the plain ground; you never move on the peaks and you never fall into
the valleys. But then you are living dead, then you are not alive.
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